I needed an oddball bullet recently so I called a high-end maker - $100 price tag. I expected aluminum in 6 to 8 weeks, got cast iron (Meehanite?) in under a week, so it was obviously one he had lying around, and I could see it wasn't new. I decided to keep it and it is a joy to use - big beefy sprue plate, bullets drop right out. What bugged me was a faint (sometimes not so faint) shadowy swirl of roughness, usually on the nose but sometimes down into the bands. There is no real pattern to it. I think it's just a cosmetic defect - if I rub the bullet with a patch a lot of it goes away, but I still don't like it. Under some light the very top of the cavities look like grey steel, but the rest of them have a dirty yellow look, so I decided they were contaminated. I tried alcohol and some really rugged stuff called MEK - no help. Some old timers at the show told me to use a low-speed drill with a brass brush - I did a little but I didn't like the idea and it didn't seem to be helping. I have read about brake parts cleaner so I sprang for a can, hosed the mold down, no good. A weird angle - when I got the mold I was surprised how quickly it heated up, maybe 4 or 6 cold wrinkles, but after the brake parts cleaner, I must be tossing over a dozen back in for that. The stuff really chilled mold - no, I didn't use it on a hot mold and months later the situation is unchanged. For the life of me it seems like that one quick chill has changed the characteristics of the mold for good. Anyway, I wondered if the way the lead was flowing had anything to do with it so I tried hand-pouring with a ladle. Bingo, problem solved. The column from the ladle is much thicker than with the bottom pour furnace so I guess that was it. Only thing, I like the bottom pour idea. The ladle sometimes picks up crud and it's much more fatiguing. I also get a lot of bad bases, since I don't think I turn it up to 12:00 every time. I have probably made thousands of bullets over 50 years but I still don't know much about it. What do y'all think?